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Back to the future part ii reparto
La muerte se convierte en ella
Regreso al Futuro Parte II es una película estadounidense de ciencia ficción de 1989 dirigida por Robert Zemeckis y escrita por Bob Gale. Es la secuela de la película de 1985 Regreso al futuro y la segunda entrega de la franquicia Regreso al futuro. La película está protagonizada por Michael J. Fox, Christopher Lloyd, Lea Thompson, Thomas F. Wilson, Elisabeth Shue (en sustitución de Claudia Wells) y Jeffrey Weissman (en sustitución de Crispin Glover), y sigue a Marty McFly (Fox) y a su amigo el Dr. Emmett “Doc” Brown (Lloyd) en su viaje de 1985 a 2015 para evitar que el hijo de Marty sabotee el futuro de la familia McFly. Cuando su archienemigo Biff Tannen (Wilson) roba la máquina del tiempo DeLorean de Doc y la utiliza para alterar la historia en su beneficio, el dúo debe regresar a 1955 para restaurar la línea temporal.
La película se produjo con un presupuesto de 40 millones de dólares y se rodó a continuación de su secuela, la Parte III. El rodaje comenzó en febrero de 1989, tras dos años de construcción de los decorados y de redacción de los guiones. Regreso al Futuro Parte II fue también un proyecto innovador para el estudio de efectos visuales Industrial Light & Magic (ILM). Además de la composición digital, ILM utilizó el sistema de cámara de control de movimiento VistaGlide, que permitía a un actor representar a varios personajes simultáneamente en la pantalla sin sacrificar el movimiento de la cámara.
The witches
Marty is forced to take his girlfriend Jennifer (this time played by Elisabeth Shue) and they see a completely futurized Hill Valley town. Marty McFly walks into a fast food store and meets his son, who turns out to be identical to him physically but resembles his father George in shyness. Biff is a bitter, decrepit old man who still lives in the McFly’s shadow, but waits for his chance to exact revenge.
Marty, in the same style as the first film, defeats the abusive Griff and his friends, causing them to fly into the city courthouse and get arrested, once again saving the McFly family from disaster.
Meanwhile Jennifer accidentally arrives at her home in the future and finds a terrible truth: Marty married her and they have two children, but a car accident crippled Marty’s hand, making it impossible for him to pursue his musical career, with which his life would have been different. Marty and the Doc manage to locate her and then return to the past.
Back to the future part ii elijah wood
How much time really passes in ‘Back to the Future’? Marty McFly travels to the past, travels to the future, returns to the present, obviously, but how much time really passes in Hill Valley during all his temporal adventures? How much time is Marty McFly away in the present? In Hill Valley, two days. In the timelines as a whole, 18 days. We’ve done the math. Let’s start with the present: when is the present? Let’s see, Marty arrives at Doc’s lab on October 25, 1985. It’s 8:18 am. By the time he flees from the Libyans in the parking lot in the DeLorean headed for 1955, it’s 1:35 am on October 26, 1985. He has been on the road for 17 hours and 17 minutes. After traveling back in time and returning, clock tower permitting, he returns to October 26, 1985, at 1:24 am. He has been out for 8 days, but only 17 hours have passed in the present. We continue.
Who framed roger ra
This time the plot is connected between 1985 and 2015. This film and the third part of the trilogy were filmed simultaneously. The film was an absolute box office success just like the first one, becoming the second highest grossing film of 1989.
Gale wrote most of the first draft himself, as Zemeckis was busy making Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Originally, the film was to take place in 1967, but Zemeckis later stated that the time paradox was a good opportunity to go back to 1955 and look at the events of the first one from another perspective. While most of the original cast agreed to return,
a major obstacle arose when negotiating Crispin Glover’s fee for reprising the role of George McFly. When it became clear that he would not be returning, the role was rewritten so that George is dead when the action takes place in the alternate 1985 version.[4] The film also includes a brief moment of generated imagery in the film.
It also includes a brief moment of computer-generated imagery in a hologram used to promote the fictional Jaws 19 film, which ended up unaltered from the first test run by ILM’s digital department because effects supervisor Ken Ralston “liked the fact that it was all messed up.”[6] The film was made to look like a hologram.